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This multidirectional, radio-controlled UFO is fully assembled and ready to fly. Gyroscopic action keeps the motor stable while the sphere turns and dips, just like in unmanned aerial vehicles. The safety cage prevents damage to the blades while you get the hang of flight, and to your home when the inevitable crashes happen. The rechargeable lithium battery powers a 5-minute flight on a 30-minute charge.

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My five-year-old grandson wanted a remote-controlled airplane for his birthday. I feared disaster if a toy was expensive, too hard to operate, or too easy to break. This toy engaged the whole family, and even though today is the first day we've tried it, it feels like a great choice and a good value. Five is probably a little too young without adult supervision, but the toy is advertised for 8-12, which seems right.

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Build your own motorized vehicles and machines and control them with a wireless remote control unit. A unique six button infrared remote allows you to control three different motors simultaneously, moving each of them forward or in reverse, with easy-to-activate touch sensors. The three motors can be combined to make complex vehicles and machines in numerous configurations limited only by your imagination.

Bring a T. rex to life with this controllable dinosaur puzzle. Pop out and assemble the 100 precut wooden pieces, add the battery pack, and let it roar. The dinosaur reacts to light and sound in free-roaming mode, or use the remote control to make it run, walk, roar, and chomp.

Color-coded components make experimenting with simple circuit boards fun and easy. Includes step-by-step instructions for 63 hands-on projects, including a disk-shooting rover, a flickering metronome, and a car alarm. The plastic components snap together with no glue needed.

Remote control machines that you make yourself! This deluxe machine-making kit helps young engineers build 20 different types of machines. With 155 building pieces and three independent motors, you are only limited by your imagination. Use the comprehensive instruction book to make a three-wheeled car, a drilling machine, a crane, and more. Once you master the process, start building new machines of your own design. The wireless, six-button infrared remote allows you to move the three motors simultaneously, and easy-to-activate touch sensors let you move your machines forward or in reverse. Full-time customer and tech support is on deck to help.

Just as dinosaurs began their domination of Earth, pterosaurs ruled the prehistoric skies. Some with wingspans as long as a modern jet plane, these flying reptiles were as spectacular in appearance as they were amazing in flight.

The history of aviation may never be the same. Forty years before the Wright brothers flew at Kitty Hawk, frantic inventors and engineers rushed to create steam-powered flying machines that they hoped would decide the fate of the Civil War. Mark Ragan, author and project historian of the Hunley (a Civil War submarine), recently discovered shocking new evidence suggesting that both sides of the conflict were struggling to craft steam-powered flying machines, capable of bombing the enemy.

Gyroscopes are used in countless devices, from smartphones, tablets, and video game controllers to airplanes and space telescopes. With this kit, young engineers can explore the astonishing powers of the gyroscope by building seven motorized models, including a robot that can balance on two linear wheels and move along a tightrope!

This sophisticated, six-hand trekking watch from Timex® includes a four-hour, fly-back chronograph that can be stopped, reset, and restarted with the push of one button, a feature originally developed in the 1930s for military aviation. The electronic compass has magnetic declination compensation to help locate true north. Features an analog quartz movement, date, Indiglo® Night-Light, and the ability to track two time zones. Genuine leather strap. Water-resistant to 328 feet.

Plucked from civilization and thrust into isolation, two remote survivors are forced to place their lives in the hands of complete strangers. Equipped with radio receivers, the remote survivors must decide between trusting their own instincts, and following the unknown voice inside their head. Those voices belong to two expert survivalists who have been given the task of keeping the contestants alive. Through chest and helmet cameras, drones and solo shot cams blanketing the region, follow the survivors on the adventure of their lifetime.

Go inside one of the newest high-tech maximum-security prisons in the United StatesAlexander Correctional Institution in Taylorsville, North Carolina. In this prison, which has earned the nickname "hell" from inmates, see how officers use sophisticated technologyand unconventional methodsto keep a "choke hold" on its violent prisoners. National Geographic uncovers the secrets behind this penitentiary and demonstrates how it has been specifically built to prevent any kind of inmate escape attempts.

Climb aboard a helicopter with National Geographic photographer Robert Haas and journey all over the world in search of wild animals and exotic places. Cruise over the savanna grasslands of Africa and watch from above as lions hunt buffalos, one of the few "fair fights" in the African wilderness. Enjoy the spectacle as brilliant pink flamingos run faster and faster along the surface of the water before taking off and landing to form the perfect shape of a huge flamingo. Track muddy footprints across a rain-drenched salt pan to find a lone wildebeest that joins a herd of zebras. Even catch a glimpse of a large group of sharks that glide silently through shallow water in search of their next meal.

Step inside Hays State Prison where a war is underway between inmates and officers. National Geographic follows inmates and prison officials as they struggle to set the rules inside these walls. Witness a surprise shakedown of inmates as special officers and a K-9 unit blanket the cell house, searching every room for contraband and weapons. Meet an inmate at the helm of a prison criminal enterprise, trafficking everything from hard drugs to cell phones through the prison.